Anyone know of a low-cost/freeware manner in which to decrypt this b****r? I've used Password-Find.com before, but they've gone up in price. Thanks.
Anyone know of a low-cost/freeware manner in which to decrypt this b****r?
Hashcat? or John the Ripper? Of course, you need to collect your own dictionaries …
Anyone know of a low-cost/freeware manner in which to decrypt this b****r? I've used Password-Find.com before, but they've gone up in price. Thanks.
Guaword should be fine for those, even the (oldish) Freeware version
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If you are into a hurry you can try the instant decryption service here
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for 29 bucks is not that bad, IMHO.
BTW I never had an occasion to use it personally but I know it was used succesfully in a couple of occasions.
@athulin
Usually (when available) "dedicated" password crackers/recover software is faster than genric ones such as John The Ripper.
jaclaz
I did try Guaword beforehand, but believe it or not, it's a 16-bit program. So none of my 64-bit OS computers will run it. Finally bit the bullet and installed a 32-bit OS VM to run Guaword. Got it to work, though.
I did try Guaword beforehand, but believe it or not, it's a 16-bit program. So none of my 64-bit OS computers will run it. Finally bit the bullet and installed a 32-bit OS VM to run Guaword. Got it to work, though.
And this is just another reason why having an old machine laying around can be handy.
Happy it worked. )
jaclaz
A piece of cake. We have the software (Advanced Office Password Breaker) that can decrypt such Word files under a minute, 100% guarantee
https://
That is being done using the pre-computed hash tables (they take 4 GB only); without them, decryption is still possible, just a bit longer (about 1 day).
If it's Office 2003 with RC4, you can find a collision with hashcat very quickly. use -m 9710 to get rc4 key, then -m 9720 to get a password equivalent.
See this article
https://